From the very beginning, and up to Rails 5, Rails used an autoloader implemented in Active Support. This autoloader is known as `classic` and is still available in Rails 6.x. Rails 7 does not include this autoloader anymore.
Starting with Rails 6, Rails ships with a new and better way to autoload, which delegates to the [Zeitwerk](https://github.com/fxn/zeitwerk) gem. This is `zeitwerk` mode. By default, applications loading the 6.0 and 6.1 framework defaults run in `zeitwerk` mode, and this is the only mode available in Rails 7.
Why Switch from `classic` to `zeitwerk`?
----------------------------------------
The `classic` autoloader has been extremely useful, but had a number of [issues](https://guides.rubyonrails.org/v6.1/autoloading_and_reloading_constants_classic_mode.html#common-gotchas) that made autoloading a bit tricky and confusing at times. Zeitwerk was developed to address them, among other [motivations](https://github.com/fxn/zeitwerk#motivation).
When upgrading to Rails 6.x, it is highly encouraged to switch to `zeitwerk` mode because `classic` mode is deprecated.
Rails 7 ends the transition period and does not include `classic` mode.
Zeitwerk was designed to be as compatible with the classic autoloader as possible. If you have a working application autoloading correctly today, chances are the switch will be easy. Many projects, big and small, have reported really smooth switches.
This guide will help you change the autoloader with confidence.
If for whatever reason you find a situation you don't know how to resolve, don't hesitate to [open an issue in `rails/rails`](https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/new) and tag [`@fxn`](https://github.com/fxn).
In applications running Rails 6.x there are two scenarios.
If the application is loading the framework defaults of Rails 6.0 or 6.1 and it is running in `classic` mode, it must be opting out by hand. You have to have something similar to this:
```ruby
# config/application.rb
config.load_defaults 6.0
config.autoloader = :classic # DELETE THIS LINE
```
As noted, just delete the override, `zeitwerk` mode is the default.
On the other hand, if the application is loading old framework defaults you need to enable `zeitwerk` mode explictly:
```ruby
# config/application.rb
config.load_defaults 5.2
config.autoloader = :zeitwerk
```
### Applications Running Rails 7
In Rails 7 there is only `zeitwerk` mode, you do not need to do anything to enable it.
Indeed, the setter `config.autoloader=` does not even exist. If `config/application.rb` has it, please just delete the line.
How to Verify The Application Runs in `zeitwerk` Mode?
If there's any file that does not define the expected constant, the task will tell you. It does so one file at a time, because if it moved on, the failure loading one file could cascade into other failures unrelated to the check we want to run and the error report would be confusing.
If there's one constant reported, fix that particular one and run the task again. Repeat until you get "All is good!".
Take for example:
```
% bin/rails zeitwerk:check
Hold on, I am eager loading the application.
expected file app/models/vat.rb to define constant Vat
```
VAT is an European tax. The file `app/models/vat.rb` defines `VAT` but the autoloader expects `Vat`, why?
### Acronyms
This is the most common kind of discrepancy you may find, it has to do with acronyms. Let's understand why do we get that error message.
The classic autoloader is able to autoload `VAT` because its input is the name of the missing constant, `VAT`, invokes `underscore` on it, which yields `vat`, and looks for a file called `var.rb`. It works.
The input of the new autoloader is the file system. Give the file `vat.rb`, Zeitwerk invokes `camelize` on `vat`, which yields `Vat`, and expects the file to define the constant `Vat`. That is what the error message says.
Fixing this is easy, you only need to tell the inflector about this acronym:
```ruby
# config/initializers/inflections.rb
ActiveSupport::Inflector.inflections(:en) do |inflect|
inflect.acronym "VAT"
end
```
Doing so affects how Active Support inflects globally. That may be fine, but if you prefer you can also pass overrides to the inflector used by the autoloader:
By default, `app/models/concerns` belongs to the autoload paths and therefore it is assumed to be a root directory. So, by default, `app/models/concerns/foo.rb` should define `Foo`, not `Concerns::Foo`.
Since Rails adds all subdirectories of `app` to the autoload paths automatically (with a few exceptions like directories for assets), we have another situation in which there are nested root directories, similar to what happens with `app/models/concerns`. That setup no longer works as is.
All known use cases of `require_dependency` have been eliminated with Zeitwerk. You should grep the project and delete them.
If your application uses Single Table Inheritance, please see the [Single Table Inheritance section](autoloading_and_reloading_constants.html#single-table-inheritance) of the Autoloading and Reloading Constants (Zeitwerk Mode) guide.
You can now robustly use constant paths in class and module definitions:
```ruby
# Autoloading in this class' body matches Ruby semantics now.
class Admin::UsersController <ApplicationController
# ...
end
```
A gotcha to be aware of is that, depending on the order of execution, the classic autoloader could sometimes be able to autoload `Foo::Wadus` in
```ruby
class Foo::Bar
Wadus
end
```
That does not match Ruby semantics because `Foo` is not in the nesting, and won't work at all in `zeitwerk` mode. If you find such corner case you can use the qualified name `Foo::Wadus`:
In `classic` mode, if `app/models/foo.rb` defines `Bar`, you won't be able to autoload that file, but eager loading will work because it loads files recursively blindly. This can be a source of errors if you test things first eager loading, execution may fail later autoloading.
In `zeitwerk` mode both loading modes are consistent, they fail and err in the same files.